I would take that with a bucket of salt. I'm not sure where she got that data, but I'm willing to wager that the majority of people surveyed were people living in third world countries where culture overshadows faith. Yes, honor killings are an unfortunate reality, but that is something that is influenced by Pakistani culture rather than Islamic teachings.

I really don't understand what her motive was with that segment, as it only serves to fear-monger more by insinuating that the number of Muslims who are radical are much larger than they appear

Are you serious? Lack of accountability? EVERY time an attack like this happens, WHETHER OR NOT it's perpetrated by Muslims, the Islamic leaders are the first to condemn it. Letters have been signed by hundreds of Islamic leaders all over of the world condemning ISIS and the like, and refuting their ideologies. Everyone demands accountability from Muslims but never actually looks to see when Muslims openly condemn it. And of course it never reaches the media when they do.

Also, there's no such thing as "Islamic Extremism". Just terrorists. Stupid, mentally unstable terrorists. To call the rest of us "moderate Muslims" is to say that 99.9% of the 1.6 billion Muslims on earth are following some diluted version of Islam, while the extremists are following the full version. There is no place for terrorism in Islam. We were asked to condemn terrorism and to take accountability for it, and even though we had no responsibility to do so, just as you don't have the responsibility to do so for the actions of others, we bit our tongues and did it. And we continue to do so over and over again, yet nobody cares when we do

Edit: okay, I wasn't really being literal when I said there's no such thing as Islamic extremism, but I get what everyone is saying. My point was that it's unfair to create this spectrum of "moderate vs extreme". I take my faith very seriously, and I don't consider myself a "moderate Muslim". I am 100% Muslim in the full sense of the word, and it's for that exact reason that I absolutely and unequivocally condemn any sort of terrorism, no matter whose name it is done in. And I actually disagree with the commentor or who said people are good "in spite of their religion, not because of it". My empathy for the victims of any attack, and my value for human life and the well being of others is a direct result of what I've been taught from my religious leaders. It's our religious leaders who are the most passionate about opposing terrorism any time it rears its head. Anyone who attends a mosque knows that that is where the voice of opposition to terrorism and violence is the loudest. It's the Muslims who rarely go to mosques who end up being the crazies, not the ones who frequent them

We thought about running g the floor the other way, but thought it'd make the platform look wider of we did it this way. Plus the way the removable section for the furnace is set up, this way worked better